From 412281047b34a785715c46e48993342b75143679 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Deniz Akansoy <116805404+DenizAkansoy@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sat, 9 Nov 2024 15:06:04 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Update index.md --- index.md | 9 ++++++--- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/index.md b/index.md index c0e25dc..de18078 100644 --- a/index.md +++ b/index.md @@ -4,10 +4,13 @@ # See: https://jekyllrb.com/docs/themes/#overriding-theme-defaults layout: single author_profile: true +title: "" --- # Hello There! -I’m Deniz, a recent MSci Physics graduate from Imperial College London Imperial College London, currently doing an MPhil in Data Intensive Science at the University of Cambridge. I’m passionate about astrophysics, and particularly about protoplanetary discs, planet formation and the search of habitable conditions elsewhere in the universe. -At Imperial, I conducted by masters thesis on the subject of radiative transfer in protoplanetary discs, particularly on determining whether proto-companions can cast detectable shadows on the outer disc, which we investigated using radmc3D simulations. More information on this work can be would in the research section. -My current MPhil programme in Data Intensive Science is focused on the applications of statistical methods, high performance computing and machine learning to physical problems, with specific applications to cosmology, gravitational waves and radioastronomy. +I’m Deniz, a recent MSci Physics graduate from Imperial College London Imperial College London, currently doing an MPhil in Data Intensive Science at the University of Cambridge. + +I am passionate about astrophysics, and particularly about protoplanetary discs, planet formation and the search of habitable conditions elsewhere in the universe. + +At Imperial, I conducted by masters thesis on the subject of radiative transfer in protoplanetary discs, particularly on determining whether proto-companions can cast detectable shadows on the outer disc, which we investigated using radmc3D simulations. More information on this work can be would in the research section. My current MPhil programme in Data Intensive Science is focused on the applications of statistical methods, high performance computing and machine learning to physical problems, with specific applications to cosmology, gravitational waves and radioastronomy.